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Desperate Journey is a 1942 American World War II action and aviation film directed by Raoul Walsh and starring Errol Flynn and Ronald Reagan.The supporting cast includes Raymond Massey, Alan Hale Sr., and Arthur Kennedy.
The Foreman Went to France (released in the USA as Somewhere in France [3]) is a 1942 British Second World War war film starring Clifford Evans, Tommy Trinder, Constance Cummings and Gordon Jackson. It was based on the real-life wartime exploits of Welsh munitions worker Melbourne Johns , who rescued machinery used to make guns for Spitfires ...
A member of the United Nations War Crimes Committee hunts down a Nazi war criminal who has fled to Connecticut 1946 United Kingdom Theirs is the Glory: Brian Desmond Hurst and Terence Young: Operation Market Garden: 1946 Philippines Walang Kamatayan: Walang Kamatayan: Tor Villano: Japanese Occupation of the Philippines: 1947 Italy Christmas at ...
It includes 1942 films that can also be found in the parent category, or in diffusing subcategories of the parent. This category is for war films released in the year 1942 . It does not include unreleased films.
Credit to director Harold French for keeping the pace brisk, but this is unremarkable fare"; [5] and 20/20 Movie Reviews wrote, "the writers of the 1980s British comedy show Allo Allo must have seen Secret Mission at some point because the similarities are just too numerous to be coincidental.
Coastal Command is a 1942 British film made by the Crown Film Unit for the Ministry of Information. The film, distributed by RKO , dramatised the work of RAF Coastal Command . Coastal Command is a documentary-style account of the Short Sunderland and Consolidated PBY Catalina flying boats during the Battle of the Atlantic .
James Stewart in Winning Your Wings (1942). During World War II and immediately after it, in addition to the many private films created to help the war effort, many Allied countries had governmental or semi-governmental agencies commission propaganda and training films for home and foreign consumption.
In 2005 it was named as one of the "100 Greatest War Films" in a poll by Britain's Channel 4. The 1975 book, The Eagle Has Landed and the later film use some of the same ideas. [ 2 ] [ 5 ] In July 2010, StudioCanal and the British Film Institute National Archive released a restoration of the Went the Day Well? to significant critical acclaim.